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HomeHealth and Safety CodeDiv. 45Pt. 2Ch. 5Art. 12§ 79205 Remedial Action Plan Requirements

§ 79205 Remedial Action Plan Requirements

Health and Safety Code·California
AI Summary·Official Text·Key Terms·Related Statutes·References
AI SummaryVerified

§ 79205 Remedial Action Plan Requirements

Key Takeaways

  • •Cleanup plans for polluted places must follow strict rules to keep people and the environment safe.
  • •The plan must think about how pollution affects health, water, and land now and in the future.
  • •They can't just move dirty stuff somewhere else if they can clean it up safely and affordably.
  • •The cheapest fix isn't always the best—long-term safety and cost matter more.

Example

A gas station leaks chemicals into the ground, making the soil and water dirty.

The cleanup plan must check how bad the pollution is, if it can spread, and pick the best way to clean it—like treating the dirt instead of just moving it somewhere else.

AI-generated — May contain errors. Not legal advice. Always verify source.

Official Source
View on CA.gov

§ 79205 Remedial Action Plan Requirements

All remedial action plans prepared or approved pursuant to this article shall be based upon Sections 78855 and 78860 and Subpart E of the National Oil and Hazardous Substances Pollution Contingency Plan (40 C.F.R. 300.400 et seq.), as amended, and upon all of the following factors, to the extent that these factors are consistent with these federal regulations and do not require a less stringent level of cleanup than these federal regulations: (a) Health and safety risks posed by the conditions at the site. When considering these risks, the department or the regional board shall consider scientific data and reports that may have a relationship to the site. (b) The effect of contamination or pollution levels upon present, future, and probable beneficial uses of contaminated, polluted, or threatened resources. (c) The effect of alternative remedial action measures on the reasonable availability of groundwater resources for present, future, and probable beneficial uses. The department or the regional board shall consider the extent to which remedial action measures are available that use, as a principal element, treatment that significantly reduces the volume, toxicity, or mobility of the hazardous substances, as opposed to remedial actions that do not use this treatment. The department or the regional board shall not select remedial action measures that use offsite transport and disposal of untreated hazardous substances or contaminated materials if practical and cost-effective treatment technologies are available. (d) Site-specific characteristics, including the potential for offsite migration of hazardous substances, the surface or subsurface soil, and the hydrogeologic conditions, as well as preexisting background contamination levels. (e) Cost-effectiveness of alternative remedial action measures. In evaluating the cost-effectiveness of proposed alternative remedial action measures, the department or the regional board shall consider, to the extent possible, the total short-term and long-term costs of these actions and shall use, as a major factor, whether the deferral of a remedial action will result, or is likely to result, in a rapid increase in cost or in the hazard to public health or the environment posed by the site. Land disposal shall not be deemed the most cost-effective measure merely on the basis of lower short-term cost. (f) The potential environmental impacts of alternative remedial action measures, including, but not limited to, land disposal of the untreated hazardous substances as opposed to treatment of the hazardous substances to remove or reduce its volume, toxicity, or mobility prior to disposal. (Added by Stats. 2022, Ch. 257, Sec. 2. (AB 2293) Effective January 1, 2023. Operative January 1, 2024, pursuant to Sec. 4 of Stats. 2022, Ch. 257.)

Last verified: January 24, 2026

Key Terms

treatmentpollutioncontaminationtoxichazardoushealthdisposalport

Related Statutes

  • § 111160 Water Contamination Notification Requirements
  • § 25208.1 Hazardous Waste Surface Impoundments
  • § 25209 Land Treatment Unit Safeguards
  • § 111071 Bottled Water Quality Reports
  • § 111150 Bottled Water Voc Monitoring

References

  • Official text at leginfo.legislature.ca.gov
  • California Legislature. Health and Safety Code. Section 79205.
View Official Source